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Impact of concomitant treatment of non-chronic total occlusion lesions at the time of chronic total occlusion intervention.

Authors :
Xenogiannis, Iosif
Karmpaliotis, Dimitri
Alaswad, Khaldoon
Jaffer, Farouc A.
Yeh, Robert W.
Patel, Mitul
Mahmud, Ehtisham
Choi, James W.
Burke, M. Nicholas
Doing, Anthony H.
Dattilo, Phil
Toma, Catalin
Uretsky, Barry
Krestyaninov, Oleg
Khelimskii, Dmitrii
Holper, Elizabeth
Potluri, Srinivasa
Wyman, R. Michael
Kandzari, David E.
Garcia, Santiago
Source :
International Journal of Cardiology. Jan2020, Vol. 299, p75-80. 6p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

During chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), sometimes non-CTO lesions are also treated. We compared the clinical and procedural characteristics and outcomes of CTO PCIs with and without concomitant treatment of a non-CTO lesion in a contemporary multicenter CTO registry. Of the 3598 CTO PCIs performed at 21 centers between 2012 and 2018, 814 (23%) also included PCI of at least one non-CTO lesion. Patients in whom non-CTO lesions were treated were older (65 ± 10 vs. 64 ± 10 years, p = 0.03), more likely to present with an acute coronary syndrome (32% vs. 23%, p < 0.01), and less likely to undergo PCI of a right coronary artery (RCA) CTO (46% vs. 58%, p < 0.01). The most common non-CTO lesion location was the left anterior descending artery (31%), followed by the circumflex (29%) and the RCA (25%).Combined non-CTO and CTO-PCI procedures had similar technical (88% vs. 87%, p = 0.33) and procedural (85% vs. 85%, p = 0.74) success and major in-hospital complication rates (3.4% vs. 2.7%, p = 0.23), but had longer procedure duration (131 [88, 201] vs. 117 [75, 179] minutes, p < 0.01), higher patient air kerma radiation dose (3.0 [1.9, 4.8] vs. 2.8 [1.5, 4.6] Gray, p < 0.01) and larger contrast volume (300 [220, 380] vs. 250 [180, 350] ml, p < 0.01). Combined CTO PCI with PCI of non-CTO lesions is associated with similar success and major in-hospital complication rates compared with cases in which only CTOs were treated, but requires longer procedure duration and higher radiation dose and contrast volume. • In 23% of CTO PCI cases at least one non-CTO PCI takes place. • Combined CTO plus non-CTO PCIs had similar success and in-hospital MACE rates compared with only-CTO PCIs. • Combined cases, however, had longer procedure duration, and higher radiation dose and contrast volume. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01675273
Volume :
299
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139924378
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2019.06.077